Wednesday, January 21, 2009

The Fall of the House of Usher

Well, my inability to add numbers correctly has suddenly come to light (again), and it turns out that YESTERDAY was THOIA’s 1000th post. Guess I need a vacation or something. But no biggie really, maybe I’ll get it right on the 2000th post... and instead of dwelling on it, how about another Poe tale?

13 comments:

Poe was quite fixated on the accidental live burial, however, who could blame him? One of the first Poe stories I read was the unquiet burial. I was six years old at the time. The thought scared the hell out of me--still does. Blood and gore doesn't do it, nor do monsters. But being buried alive? That'll do it!

Frankly I think this adaption rather unimaginative. Yes, it is kind of moody, but both climaxes are wasted here. That Classics Illustrated don´t focus on the accidental burial I understand, no gore in 44, okay, 47 *g, but where is the crumbling house? At least this they could have done right.

FIRST AND MOST IMPORTANTLY CONGRATULATIONS ON 1000 POSTS!! ITS UNREAL THAT YOU'VE POSTED THIS MUCH STUFF AND MANY OF US ARE FOREVER IN YOUR DEBT!

I DIDNT THINK THIS USHER VERSION WAS TOO BAD, IT LACKED SOME DETAILS BUT FLOWED QUICK AND THE ART WAS NICE AND SPOOKY. LOVE THE BOTTOM PANELS ON PAGE 10 OF MADELINE........NOW I WANT TO WATCH THE CORMAN MOVIE VERSION.

Congratulations, Karswell! All the time, effort, love, and devotion you put into The Horrors of it All is evident in each of your posts. I think it's highly appropriate that you should be celebrating this milestone as dark denizens all over the world are celebrating Poe's 200th birthday!

The artwork in today's story really stirred me. Now, I'm longing for a sunset...

'The Fall of the House of Usher' is by far my favorite tale by Poe. Madness, tragedy and sheer terror were always present themes in his works, but in no other story do they come together so effectively and terrifyingly as in this one.

The Poe celebration is just flawless, Kars. I still marvel at how you manage to unearth all these treasures.

Fascinating how Poe's stories have been rewritten in so many ways, and how, over a hundred years after his death, they were still being diluted for public consumption. The Fall of the House of Usher is still so chilling that a friend of mine -- a forty year old -- tried to read it for the first time and it creeped him out so much he could not finish it.

Now that's literary genius. Happy birthday, Ed.

Congratulations on the 1000 posts. Since discovering your site I have been making my way through the archives. No wonder it's taking so long!

I was curious to know if anyone has ever come up with even a ballpark estimate of just how many stories were published between, say, 1950 and November 54 that might be defined as "pre-code horror."

For such a short heyday, there appear to have been far more than I would have guessed.

Thanks again everyone, you guys are the best commentors any blogger could ever hope for, and I totally mean it! I hope you all stick around for the next 1000 posts, or at least until I'm stark raving Madeline... whichever comes first.

One more day of Poe, and a tag game, you're ALL invited to play! See ya in the morn...

"...the capital of online comic book horrors... saying "Not the best story THOIA has run" is a bit like saying "one of Beethoven's lesser symphonies!"---Quasar Dragon

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"...an online repository of vintage comic fear fare where individual stories from long out-of-print issues are posted in high resolution, page by page. For a fan of EC, Atlas and other Silver Age-era comic companies, it is pure heaven (and hell)..."---Bryan Reesman (Attention Deficit Delirium)